No Metro Manila lockdowns for the first time since 2020

The Department of Health earlier said the daily count of Covid-19 infections had hit a plateau in all areas of the country, with new cases reaching only 200-plus for four straight days.

Dexter Cabalza

Dexter Cabalza

Philippine Daily Inquirer

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Commuters on board public transport in Metro Manila. Independent analytics group OCTA Research on Thursday, February 24, 2022, says Metro Manila is ready to be placed under COVID-19 Alert Level 1 as the region may only have less than 200 cases a day by the start of March. (File photo by RICHARD A. REYES / Philippine Daily Inquier)

April 11, 2022

MANILA — For the first time since March 2020, no area or even household in any of Metro Manila’s 16 cities and one municipality was considered on lockdown, the National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) confirmed on Saturday.

Even across the nation, only four households, with seven COVID-19 infected individuals, in the Cordillera Administrative Region remained on granular lockdown, as of April 8.

The Philippine National Police, however, reported that there were still 292 quarantine control points throughout the country, but none in Metro Manila nor Central Luzon.

Lockdowns

While previously called by different names — localized enhanced community quarantine, pocket lockdown, special concern lockdown — Metro Manila local governments have been implementing granular lockdowns since 2020, based on their own set of rules.

The local governments usually close off a barangay, street, establishment, compound or household where clustering of COVID-19 cases has been detected.

During a lockdown, which usually lasts from several days up to two weeks, authorities conduct mass testing on all residents in the area to detect even asymptomatic cases.

Lockdowns are only lifted when the local epidemiology and surveillance unit observed a significant downtrend in the number of active COVID-19 cases.

The Department of Health (DOH) earlier said the daily count of COVID-19 infections had hit a plateau in all areas of the country, with new cases reaching only 200-plus for four straight days.

More areas on Alert Level 1

The average daily infections from March 31 to April 6 also slid to 357 cases from 382 registered from March 28 to April 3. The country’s positivity rate is also now down to 1.8 percent from 2 percent during the same period.

But according to the DOH COVID-19 online tracker, the number of new cases rose to 302 on April 9, compared with 290 on April 8 .

Of the total 3,681,101 cases as of April 9, only 0.8 percent were active cases. Majority of them asymptomatic, mild or moderate, according to the DOH.

Of the total confirmed COVID-19 cases, most were from the NCR 1, 170,678 (31.8 percent).

With the improving COVID-19 situation in the country, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases reclassified more areas on Alert Level 1, the least restrictive in the five-tier quarantine classification.

As of Friday, there were 78 provinces, highly urbanized cities, and independent component cities, as well as 178 component cities and municipalities on alert level 1 until April 15. Meanwhile, the rest of the country remains at Alert Level 2.

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